Kind and Estimated Stocking Amount of Antidotes for Initial Treatment for Acute Poisoning at Emergency Medical Centers in Korea.
10.3346/jkms.2014.29.11.1562
- Author:
Chang Hwan SOHN
1
;
Seung Mok RYOO
;
Kyoung Soo LIM
;
Won KIM
;
Hoon LIM
;
Bum Jin OH
Author Information
1. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Ulsan College of Medicine, Asan Medical Center, Seoul, Korea. bjoh@amc.seoul.kr
- Publication Type:Original Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- Keywords:
Antidotes;
Stock;
Poisoning;
Emergency Medical Services
- MeSH:
Acute Disease;
Antidotes/*supply & distribution/therapeutic use;
Databases, Factual;
Emergency Service, Hospital;
Humans;
Poisoning/*drug therapy;
Republic of Korea
- From:Journal of Korean Medical Science
2014;29(11):1562-1571
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
Antidotes for toxicological emergencies can be life-saving. However, there is no nationwide estimation of the antidotes stocking amount in Korea. This study tried to estimate the quantities of stocking antidotes at emergency department (ED). An expert panel of clinical toxicologists made a list of 18 emergency antidotes. The quantity was estimated by comparing the antidote utilization frequency in a multicenter epidemiological study and the nation-wide EDs' data of National Emergency Department Information System (NEDIS). In an epidemiological study of 11 nationwide EDs from January 2009 to December 2010, only 92 (1.9%) patients had been administered emergency antidotes except activated charcoal among 4,870 cases of acute adult poisoning patients. Comparing with NEDIS data, about 1,400,000 patients visited the 124 EDs nationwide due to acute poisoning and about 103,348 adult doses of the 18 emergency antidotes may be required considering poisoning severity score. Of these, 13,224 (1.9%) adult doses of emergency antidotes (575 of atropine, 144 of calcium gluconate or other calcium salts, 2,587 of flumazenil, 3,450 of N-acetylcysteine, 5,893 of pralidoxime, 287 of hydroxocobalamin, 144 of sodium nitrite, and 144 of sodium thiosulfate) would be needed for maintaining the present level of initial treatment with emergency antidotes at EDs in Korea.